bpesta22 said:Perhaps this was discussed elsewhere, but anyone know if Randi would test lie detectors for the prize money?
You would have to ensure that the interpreters didnt set up a predetermined string of T/F/T/T/F/F/F/F/T/..... as answers.Hastur said:
3. Each will be given one polygraph readout. Any identifying marks (subject's name, case number, whatever) will be redacted; the interpreter doing a blind read. The interpreters will not be told of what questions were asked each subject. Each question will be marked off to avoid confusion. There shall be no conferring between interpreters.
4. Interpreters will be asked to determine which of the ten questions are showing truth or falsehood. For the purposes of a "correct" answer, the determination of the original interpreter will be the standard. Interpreters will have as much time as they require. When all have signaled they are done, the readouts will be given to new interpreters. This will continue until all interpreters have completed ten readout answer forms.
Sujay said:I believe Randi HAS spoken against polygraph tests, but I am not sure it would qualify for the prize. The problem lies in the fact that the proponents of the polygraph themselves do not consider it to be an "exact science". What accuracy percentage would Randi settle for? A long-term, sustained test, proving that polygraph tests are not very accurate, or have negligible rates of accuracy would probably settle the matter? If, over a long period of time, if polygraphs were shown to have 70% accuracy atleast, then that might be something of interest.
bpesta22 said:Perhaps this was discussed elsewhere, but anyone know if Randi would test lie detectors for the prize money?
KRAMER said:
We've assailed the use of polygraph ("lie detector") technology here, many times. It is simply an area of failed technology, one that seemed promising, but then proved to be not only faulty, but quite dangerous to those upon whom was inflicted. State and federal governments, however, opted to embrace it despite the facts. Why are we not surprised? We can't forget that jailed nuclear physicist Wen Ho Lee was misled by federal investigators who told him he had failed a Department of Energy lie-detector test. During a lengthy interrogation, FBI agents pressured Lee to admit to passing nuclear weapons secrets to China. Lee said he had not and insisted he was telling the truth. His interrogators, however, never told him that DOE polygraph operators had actually given him a high score for honesty. Lee is only one victim of this mis-use of technology.
Now, in the latest reality check, Dr. Stephen E. Fienberg, chairman of the statistics department at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, concluded that "almost a century of research has produced a pseudoscience good for tricking naive people into blurting out the truth, but not much else."
Sujay said:Taken from Randi's archives April 4, 2003 :
http://www.randi.org/jr/040403.html
For the complete article, click on the link, here is a part of the article :
Randi calls it a "psuedoscience", and its not really paranormal, so it might not qualify for the prize.
KRAMER said:
Originally posted by Jekyll
You would have to ensure that the interpreters didnt set up a predetermined string of T/F/T/T/F/F/F/F/T/..... as answers. To show that polygraphs work you would have to repeated identify known criminals from transcripts and polygraph readings of several suspects taken before the evidence that differentiated them became avalible.
bpesta22 said:What made me ask: A colleague was at a conference last week, wherein part of it included a presentation by FBI agents on the psychology of lying.
These people were "expert" polygraphists who swear by the technique.
They use the lie detector in combo with other psychological measures of whether one is lying. They conducted a field experiment where they had 5 randomly selected people.
Each was to play the role of a manager who was accused of cooking the books by top management. 4 of the subjects were told they were in fact innocent of the charge. The fifth one was told he was in fact guilty, but if he could fool the interrogators that he would receive 500$ (in real money!). Thus giving him real-world incentive to lie.
According to my friend, the expert analysis was strikingly accurate. After the FBI agents lectured on what to look for, picking out the liar among the five was a no-brainer.
So, I wonder if the lie detector test is just the pretext law enforcement uses to get the suspect talking. Then, the actual science of lying is applied to the suspect's behavior / reactions, which make the "test" valid to some level of accuracy better than chance, though far less than perfect.
Randi seems to be of the mindset that most everyone is an idiot, so it's no surprise to hear law enforcement using junk science.
I agree in general, but surely there are some smart law enforcers out there-- some perhaps are even smarter than I or Randi.
The fact that they swear by it gives me pause. Perhaps the tests have some validity; perhaps it's confirmation bias, or perhaps the validity is due to other techniques the examiner uses to form a conclusion.
I just wonder if there's some validity to the testing scenario beyond just the occasional naive person offering info he / she didn't need to, for fear of the test.
TIA.
Kramer, are you related to Randi?!
I've been thinking about this off and on for a couple of hours and I still can't work out what this actually demonstrates. Simplistically I'm thinking if all five are asked the question "did you cook the books?" the answers would be -bpesta22 said:... Each was to play the role of a manager who was accused of cooking the books by top management. 4 of the subjects were told they were in fact innocent of the charge. The fifth one was told he was in fact guilty, but if he could fool the interrogators that he would receive 500$ (in real money!). Thus giving him real-world incentive to lie.